"McConnell stood up and said, 'Please come and participate," Sen Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va, said in an interview yesterday, describing the Kentucky Republican's request to GOP senators during a lunch.
She also said, "I think they are opening up those meetings. I don't even know if they had any closed meetings."
The male-only makeup of the 13-member group had been a distraction as GOP senators begin writing their bill repealing much of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, one of the party's top priorities.
"The working group that counts is all 52 of us, and we're having extensive meetings" daily, McConnell told reporters. "Nobody's being excluded based on gender."
The all-male makeup of the group was clearly an irritant among some of the chamber's five GOP women. It also became a target for Democrats eager to paint the evolving Republican legislation as a measure that's damaging to women needing medical care, even as key decisions are being made by men.
"That's really up to the leadership," Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, the longest-serving female GOP senator in her 21st year in the chamber, said of the group's lack of women.
Asked about the group, Sen Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said, "I just want to make sure we have some women on it."
"We know it makes a difference when women are in the room, and we know it makes a difference when women aren't in the room on what is brought up, how it's seen and how it's put together," said Sen Patty Murray, D-Wash., the No. 3 Senate Democratic leader.
Capito, who's criticized House-approved cuts in the Medicaid program for poor and disabled people, attended yesterday's private meeting of the working group. Her state is among the 31 that has accepted additional money to expand Medicaid under Obama's law.
GOP senators have made clear they will likely make substantial changes in the House bill. Some have criticized that measure's cuts in the Medicaid program for poor and disabled people, the federal subsidies that would leave many consumers with higher out-of-pocket costs and the estimated 24 million people who'd lose coverage.
The 13 senators McConnell appointed to the informal group include himself and other party leaders and committee chairmen, conservative mavericks, lawmakers from states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act and others.
White House spokesman Sean Spicer distanced the Trump administration from the group's membership.
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